Air Plan Approval; Ohio; Test Methods; Error Correction, 68458-68465 [2015-28095]
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[FR Doc. 2015–28098 Filed 11–4–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R05–OAR–2009–0807; FRL–9936–54–
Region 5]
Air Plan Approval; Ohio; Test Methods;
Error Correction
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is determining that a
portion of an October 26, 2010, action
was in error and is making a correction
pursuant to section 110(k)(6) of the
Clean Air Act. The October 26, 2010,
EPA action approved various revisions
to Ohio regulations in the EPA approved
state implementation plan (SIP). The
revisions were intended to consolidate
air quality standards into a new chapter
of rules and to adjust the cross
references accordingly in various related
Ohio rules. These changes included a
specific revision to the cross reference
in the Ohio rule pertaining to methods
for measurements for comparison with
the particulate matter air quality
standards. This final correction action
removes any misperception that EPA
approved any revision to the pertinent
rule other than the revised cross
reference. This action will therefore
assure that the codification of the
October 26, 2010, action is in accord
with the actual substance of the action.
DATES: This final rule is effective on
December 7, 2015.
ADDRESSES: EPA has established a
docket for this action under Docket ID
No. EPA–R05–OAR–2009–0807. All
documents in the docket are listed on
the www.regulations.gov Web site.
Although listed in the index, some
information is not publicly available,
i.e., Confidential Business Information
(CBI) or other information whose
disclosure is restricted by statute.
Certain other material, such as
copyrighted material, is not placed on
the Internet and will be publicly
available only in hard copy form.
Publicly available docket materials are
available either electronically through
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at
the Environmental Protection Agency,
Region 5, Air and Radiation Division, 77
West Jackson Boulevard, Chicago,
Illinois 60604. This facility is open from
8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through
Friday, excluding Federal holidays. We
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SUMMARY:
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recommend that you telephone John
Summerhays, Environmental Scientist,
at (312) 886–6067 before visiting the
Region 5 office.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: John
Summerhays, Environmental Scientist,
Attainment Planning and Maintenance
Section, Air Programs Branch (AR–18J),
Environmental Protection Agency,
Region 5, 77 West Jackson Boulevard,
Chicago, Illinois 60604, (312) 886–6067,
summerhays.john@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
supplementary information section is
arranged as follows:
I. Summary of EPA’s Proposed Rulemaking
II. Comments and EPA’s Responses
III. What action is EPA taking?
IV. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Summary of EPA’s Proposed
Rulemaking
On June 4, 2003, Ohio submitted a
variety of revisions to the EPA approved
version of Ohio Administrative Code
(OAC) 3745–17 in the state’s SIP, which
regulates particulate matter and opacity
from affected sources. While EPA
subsequently approved many of these
revisions, EPA published action on June
27, 2005, proposing to disapprove
specific submitted revisions in OAC
3745–17–03(B) that in EPA’s view
relaxed existing SIP opacity limitations
without an adequate analysis under
section 110(l) or section 193 of the
Clean Air Act.1 Consistent with this
proposed disapproval, the version of
OAC 3745–17–03(B) submitted by the
state on June 4, 2003, was not, and is
not, an approved provision of the Ohio
SIP.
On September 10, 2009, for purposes
of consolidating its existing SIP rules
identifying applicable air quality
standards, and to adjust the cross
references between rules accordingly,
Ohio submitted additional revisions to
several of its existing rules to EPA for
approval into the SIP. Most notably,
these rule revisions included a
modification to the existing cross
reference in OAC 3745–17–03(A), which
was necessary because the ambient
particulate matter measurement method
identified in this paragraph was for
purposes of assessing attainment with
the ambient air quality standards now
located in OAC 3745–25–02, rather than
in OAC 3745–17–02.
On October 26, 2010, at 75 FR 65572,
EPA published a direct final action
approving the relevant revisions in the
September 10, 2009, submission. In the
preamble and in the codification of the
October 26, 2010, action, EPA
1 See
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70 FR 36901 (June 27, 2005).
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erroneously listed the approved SIP
revisions as including the entirety of
OAC 3745–17–03, rather than specifying
more precisely that the approval as it
pertained to OAC 3745–17–03 applied
only to the revised cross reference in
OAC 3745–17–03(A). This error left the
misimpression that EPA had approved
other significant substantive revisions in
OAC 3745–17–03, including those in
OAC 3745–17–03(B) that EPA had
previously proposed to disapprove. The
codification in the October 26, 2010,
action with respect to OAC 3745–17–03
should have been explicitly limited to
OAC 3745–17–03(A), to reflect the EPA
approval of only the revised cross
reference.
EPA subsequently recognized that the
codification erroneously left the
misimpression that it had approved
more of OAC 3745–17–03 than the
revision of the cross reference in OAC
3745–17–03(A). On April 3, 2013, at 78
FR 19990, EPA published action to
correct the error. EPA took this action
pursuant to its general rulemaking
authority under Administrative
Procedures Act section 553. Two parties
challenged EPA’s April 3, 2013, action,
and one of these parties also filed a
petition for reconsideration of that
action, objecting that EPA failed to
correct the error in the October 26, 2010,
action in accordance with the
procedures of section 110(k)(6) of the
Clean Air Act.
EPA responded to the petition for
reconsideration by agreeing to take this
action pursuant to section 110(k)(6), as
requested by the petitioner.
Accordingly, EPA published proposed
rulemaking on February 7, 2014, using
its authority under section 110(k)(6) to
correct errors in its rulemaking of
October 26, 2010.2 Given the
petitioners’ expressed interest in
commenting on EPA’s action, EPA
elected to use its authority under
section 110(k)(6) for this action because,
under these circumstances, it would
provide the best mechanism to correct
the apparent misunderstandings
concerning the error in the October 26,
2010, action.
EPA’s February 7, 2014, proposal
provides an extensive description of the
error in its October 26, 2010,
rulemaking, provided in subsections
entitled, ‘‘What was the error in
description and codification?’’, ‘‘What
precipitated this error?’’, and ‘‘Why was
it evident that this was an error?’’ It is
not necessary to repeat that detailed
explanation here. EPA proposed to
correct the error to remove any
misimpression in its October 26, 2010,
2 See
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79 FR 7412 (Feb. 7, 2014).
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rulemaking that EPA had approved any
revisions to OAC 3745–17–03 other than
the cross reference in OAC 3745–17–
03(A). Specifically, EPA proposed to
take action pursuant to Clean Air Act
section 110(k)(6) repromulgating the
correction published on April 3, 2013.
EPA solicited comments on this
proposed error correction, while noting
that any comments on the technical or
legal merits of certain substantive
revisions to OAC 3745–17–03 (e.g., the
opacity-related provisions in OAC
3745–17–03(B)) or on the pending
proposed disapproval of those
provisions would not be germane to this
error correction rulemaking.
EPA intended to correct the error in
the October 26, 2010, action first and
then separately to complete the action to
address the merits of the substantive
revisions to OAC 3745–17–03 in the
June 4, 2003, SIP submission that were
the subject of the June 27, 2005,
proposed disapproval. To this end, EPA
published a supplemental proposal on
June 26, 2014, reopening comment on
its prior proposed disapproval of
revisions to OAC 3745–17–03.3
Subsequently, however, Ohio has
withdrawn the portion of the June 4,
2003, submission that EPA proposed to
disapprove.4
Accordingly, since the provisions is
withdrawn, EPA does not need to
complete action on the June 4, 2003, SIP
submission. Significantly, this also
confirms that the submitted substantive
revisions to OAC 3745–17–03 are not
part of the EPA approved SIP and that
the EPA’s October 26, 2010, action
could not have revised those elements
of the existing version of OAC 3745–17–
03 in the SIP, inadvertently or
otherwise. Except for an amendment to
the cross reference to ambient air
quality standards in OAC 3745–17–
03(A) (which EPA approved on October
26, 2010), the version of OAC 3745–17–
03 in the SIP remains the version
effective in the state on January 31,
1998, approved by EPA on October 16,
2007.
II. Comments and EPA’s Responses
EPA received comments on its
proposed error correction from three
parties: (i) The Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency (Ohio EPA); (ii) the
Ohio Utility Group; and (iii) a group
including the Ohio Chamber of
Commerce, Ohio Manufacturers
79 FR 36277 (June 26, 2014).
letter from Craig W. Butler, Director, Ohio
EPA, to Susan Hedman, Regional Administrator,
USEPA Region 5, dated September 5, 2014,
‘‘request[ing] withdrawal of [Ohio’s] June 4, 2003
request to incorporate paragraph (B)(1)(b) into
Ohio’s SIP.’’
Association, and Ohio Chemistry
Technology Council (Chamber et al.).
The following are significant adverse
comments from each commenter and
EPA’s responses.
Ohio EPA
Comment: The commenter asserted
that: ‘‘On February 7, 2014, U.S. EPA
proposed, as an error correction, to
remove from Ohio’s State
Implementation Plan (SIP) a previously
approved (October 26, 2010) portion of
OAC Rule 3745–17–07 regarding
methods for measurements to determine
compliance with Ohio’s 20% opacity
limitation.’’ 5 With this statement, the
commenter is implying that EPA in fact
approved substantive revisions to OAC
3745–17–03 in the October 26, 2010,
action, rather than merely approved the
cross reference in OAC 3745–17–03(A).
The commenter suggested that EPA
acted on ‘‘the entirety’’ of the revisions
to OAC 3745–17–03.
Response: EPA disagrees with the
commenter’s premise that the Agency
approved any portion of OAC 3745–17–
03 other than the revision to the cross
reference in OAC 3745–17–03(A). EPA’s
February 17, 2014, proposed action rule
provides an extensive explanation of the
error that occurred in the October 26,
2010, action and the genesis of the error.
Ohio’s clearly stated purpose in making
the September 10, 2009, submission was
to consolidate its existing SIP provisions
relating to ambient air quality standards
and to revise certain cross references in
existing approved SIP rules in order to
reflect that reorganization. The specific
SIP revisions at issue in the state’s
submission were reflected in redline
and the redlined document identified
the cross reference in OAC 3745–17–
03(A) as the only revision relevant to
OAC 3745–17–03. This indicates that
approval of any substantive revisions in
OAC 3745–17–03(B) would have been
beyond the scope of the rulemaking.
Moreover, EPA had already proposed to
disapprove revisions to OAC 3745–17–
03(B) on June 27, 2005, EPA received
numerous, substantial comments for
and against that proposed disapproval,
and the rulemaking of October 26, 2010,
provided no evidence of consideration
of any of these comments. Although the
commenter described EPA’s proposed
error correction action as an action to
‘‘remove . . . a previously approved’’
portion of rule, this is simply incorrect.
EPA did not ‘‘previously approve’’ the
3 See
4 See
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5 EPA’s October 26, 2010, rulemaking makes no
reference to OAC 3745–17–07 (containing opacity
limits). EPA presumes that the commenter intends
to refer to OAC 3745–17–03, which among other
provisions has provisions relating to measurement
of opacity.
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portions of OAC 3745–17–03 that the
Agency rulemaking of October 26, 2010,
did not substantively address. EPA fully
acknowledged in the February 17, 2014,
proposal that the error that occurred in
the October 26, 2010, action was the
result of misunderstandings and
miscommunications that it is seeking to
rectify in this final error correction
action. EPA is taking this final action in
order to avoid further confusion on the
part of regulated entities, regulators, and
members of the public.
Comment: The commenter stated that
it ‘‘firmly believes [that the provision in
OAC 3745–17–03(B)] is fully
approvable.’’ The commenter explained
that it was ‘‘attaching, and reaffirming’’
its prior comments on EPA’s proposed
disapproval of this provision in the June
27, 2005, action. The commenter further
requested that ‘‘[c]onsideration should
be taken to the previous comments
submitted by Ohio EPA and others
regarding the approvability of the
provision at question in this action.’’
Response: As explained in the
February 17, 2014, proposal for this
action, EPA is focusing this section
110(k)(6) rulemaking on the specific
error that occurred in the October 26,
2010, action. This rulemaking is not
addressing the substantive merits of any
portion of OAC 3745–17–03. Instead,
this rulemaking is addressing whether
EPA made an error in its October 26,
2010, rulemaking by including a
codification that went beyond the scope
of the rulemaking and whether EPA
should correct that error by correcting
the codification to reflect that the only
portion of OAC 3745–17–03 that was
addressed in that rulemaking was the
cross reference in OAC 3745–17–03(A).
Accordingly, the commenter’s
resubmission of its prior comments on
the June 27, 2005, proposed disapproval
is inappropriate and not germane to this
action.
In addition to being outside the scope
of this error correction action, EPA
notes that the commenter’s arguments
also support EPA’s conclusion that the
October 26, 2010, action was in error to
the extent that it appeared to approve
any revision beyond the cross reference
in OAC 3745–17–03(A). The commenter
explicitly acknowledged that EPA
previously received significant
comments concerning the merits of OAC
3745–17–03(B), in particular comments
that in the commenter’s view warrant
reversal of EPA’s prior proposed
disapproval. Furthermore, the
commenter in effect argued that EPA
has not adequately considered these
comments. This is fully consistent with
EPA’s own observation that its October
26, 2010, rulemaking provided no
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evidence of any consideration of public
comments concerning OAC 3745–17–
03(B) whatsoever (again, because this
provision was outside the scope of that
rulemaking). Thus, the commenter
appeared to agree with EPA’s view that
the October 26, 2010, rulemaking does
not provide any evidence of the
consideration of comments regarding
OAC 3745–17–03(B) that would be
necessary for any approval or
disapproval of OAC 3745–17–03(B) to
be considered lawful. Moreover, the
commenter did not appear to dispute
EPA’s view that rulemaking on OAC
3745–17–03(B) could not be considered
a lawful and valid part of the October
26, 2010, rulemaking even if it had been
intended to be within the scope of the
rulemaking. As explained in the
February 17, 2014, proposal for this
action, EPA had no such intentions and
the fact that EPA did not address prior
substantive comments on the merits of
OAC 3745–17–03(B) should have
alerted the commenter and other parties
to this fact.
Finally, EPA acknowledges the
commenter’s request that that EPA
complete its consideration of comments
on the merits of OAC 3745–17–03(B),
but such consideration is outside the
scope of this rulemaking. By separate
action, EPA intended to address the
merits of the substantive revisions to
OAC 3745–17–03 in the June 4, 2003,
SIP submission that were the subject of
the June 27, 2005, proposed
disapproval. To this end, EPA published
a supplemental proposal on June 26,
2014, reopening comment on its prior
proposed disapproval of certain
substantive revisions to OAC 3745–17–
03.6 Subsequently, however, Ohio
withdrew its submittal of revisions to
OAC 3745–17–03(B).7 This renders
consideration of comments with respect
to the withdrawn submission moot, both
for purposes of the June 27, 2005,
proposed disapproval and for purposes
of this error correction action.
Comment: The commenter objected
that ‘‘U.S. EPA has made certain
assertions regarding [OAC 3745–17–
03(B)] that go beyond the scope of this
proposed correction. U.S. EPA refers to
the provision as ‘significant and
substantive’ and states the ‘unapproved’
revisions ‘would allow significantly
more opacity during certain periods.’ ’’
The commenter disputed these
statements. The commenter asserted its
belief that ‘‘U.S. EPA has crossed the
6 See
79 FR 36277 (June 26, 2014).
letter from Craig W. Butler, Director, Ohio
EPA, to Susan Hedman, Regional Administrator,
USEPA Region 5, dated September 5, 2014, which
may be found in the docket for this final action.
7 See
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threshold and cannot go forward with
the package under 110(k), since U.S.
EPA is now making a technical
argument as to why the previously
approved SIP revision is no longer
acceptable.’’ The commenter also argued
that ‘‘as a procedural matter, U.S. EPA
must start over from the beginning and
outline and address the entire technical
issue in full and not use the 110(k)
‘error’ approach.’’
Response: The premise of the
commenter’s arguments is that EPA’s
February 17, 2014, action in effect
proposed to finalize EPA’s prior
proposed disapproval of certain
portions of OAC 3745–17–03, not
merely correcting the error that led to
the misimpression that EPA had already
approved the revisions in toto. The
commenter is thereby ignoring EPA’s
clear statements about the actual scope
of this error correction.
As explained in the February 17,
2014, proposal for this action, EPA is
focusing this section 110(k)(6)
rulemaking on the specific error that
occurred in the October 26, 2010,
action. EPA provided extensive
discussion and explanation of the error
that occurred in the October 26, 2010,
action and why EPA could not be
considered to have acted on any
revisions to OAC 3745–17–03 that were
outside the scope of that rulemaking.
EPA explained the significance of OAC
3745–17–03(B) in the February 17, 2014,
proposal as a means of explaining why
EPA considered it important to correct
the errors in its October 26, 2010,
rulemaking. EPA noted in passing that
it had already proposed to disapprove
certain provisions for reasons that were
already a matter of public record in the
Federal Register as a means of
emphasizing that it could not have
approved those revisions in the October
26, 2010, action without an explicit
discussion and justification for any such
approval.
The commenter appears to agree that
the revisions in OAC 3745–17–03(B)
that it advocated for EPA to approve are
significant and substantive. EPA
statements regarding the significance of
the error, however, cannot be
considered to constitute final review of
the merits of the erroneously addressed
provisions. The October 26, 2010, action
clearly did not address the merits of
OAC 3745–17–03(B), and EPA’s action
proposing to correct an error related to
these provisions did not address the
merits of these provisions either.
The commenter disagreed in
particular with EPA’s characterization
of OAC 3745–17–03(B) in the February
17, 2014, proposal as allowing
significantly more opacity during
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certain periods. A more precise
statement would have been that EPA
had proposed to disapprove the
pertinent revisions to OAC 3745–17–
03(B) in the June 27, 2005, proposal
based in significant part on the view
that the revisions would allow
significantly more opacity during
certain periods. The commenter, along
with several other commenters, has
disputed EPA’s proposed views
regarding the merits of OAC 3745–17–
03(B). As explained in detail in the
February 17, 2014, proposal for this
error correction, however, EPA did not
intend, and could not have intended, to
address the substantive merits of those
revisions in the October 26, 2010,
action. Indeed, with Ohio’s withdrawal
of its request for rulemaking on these
provisions, EPA will no longer be
conducting final rulemaking on the
merits of OAC 3745–17–03(B).
Nevertheless, the more relevant point is
that the existence of these disputes as to
the merits of OAC 3745–17–03(B)
illustrates the importance of correcting
any errors that might create the
misimpression that EPA had completed
its review of these issues. EPA believes
that the significance of the provisions in
OAC 3745–17–03(B) and the
outstanding questions regarding
whether those provisions could have
been approved consistent with CAA
requirements provide added value to
correcting any misimpressions regarding
the status of those provisions, namely
misimpressions reasserted in these
comments that EPA had already
completed rulemaking on these
provisions.
Contrary to the commenter’s
statement, EPA’s proposed rulemaking
to correct the errors in its October 26,
2010, action was not based on a
technical argument regarding the merits
of OAC 3745–17–03(B), including any
technical argument as to whether these
provisions allow significantly more
opacity during certain periods. This
assertion regarding whether the now
withdrawn revisions to OAC 3745–17–
03 would allow more opacity (made in
EPA’s 2005 proposed rulemaking
addressing the merits of Ohio’s now
withdrawn SIP revision and contested
by various commenters) illustrates the
significance of the error in the October
26, 2010, action. However, the
commenter provided no reason why
characterization of the issue as
significant and identification of any of
the unresolved issues that were not
addressed in the October 26, 2010,
rulemaking (or elsewhere) should
preclude EPA from assuring that the
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October 26, 2010, rulemaking is
characterized properly.
Comment: The commenter objected to
EPA statements in a separate unrelated
rulemaking regarding SIP revisions for
the State of Alabama. The commenter
referred to EPA statements that the
commenter characterized as citing ‘‘the
2005 proposed disapproval of Ohio’s
revision, in part, as justification for the
proposed disapproval of Alabama’s
revision.’’ The commenter further
asserted that this ‘‘mislead[s] the readers
of the Alabama proposal that Ohio’s
proposed disapproval has followed its
due course, when it has not.’’ The
commenter requested that ‘‘any action
taken on the Alabama proposal should
not be used as justification for
disapproving Ohio’s provision.’’
Response: EPA acknowledges that the
proposed action concerning the State of
Alabama mentioned the June 27, 2005,
proposed disapproval of the Ohio
submission. The existence of that
proposal was, and is, a matter of record.
EPA mentioned the June 27, 2005,
proposed disapproval merely as means
of explaining its views on relevant
issue, not as a basis for a particular final
action. The commenter did not explain
why this comment concerning a
proposed action in another state is
relevant to the present error correction
action concerning Ohio, nor does EPA
consider it germane to this final action.
In any event, the state has now
withdrawn the portion of the
submission that EPA proposed to
disapprove, so this comment is moot.
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Ohio Utility Group
Comment: The commenter asserted
that ‘‘U.S. EPA’s action is not trivial and
is not a mere ‘correction.’ In support of
this statement, the commenter recited
its view of the history of rulemaking on
OAC 3745–17–03(B), including
adoption by Ohio and proposed
disapproval by EPA. The commenter
observed that EPA received extensive
comments on the June 27, 2005,
proposed disapproval, but
acknowledged that ‘‘U.S. EPA never
finalized this proposed action and,
based on a review of the record, U.S.
EPA never responded to comments
submitted on this proposed rule.’’ The
commenter presented a summary of
arguments in support of the merits of
the opacity ‘‘exemption’’ in OAC 3745–
17–03(B) that EPA proposed to
disapprove in the June 27, 2005,
proposal, and concluded that ‘‘this
exemption is technically defensible and
the data [compiled to formulate the
exemption] were never rebutted by U.S.
EPA.’’
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Response: The commenter did not
elaborate on its argument that EPA’s
proposed error correction action ‘‘is not
trivial’’ or why EPA’s proposed action is
not consistent with EPA’s authority to
correct errors under section 110(k)(6).
To the extent that the commenter is
arguing that EPA’s authority under
section 110(k)(6) is limited to correcting
‘‘trivial’’ errors, EPA disagrees. On its
face, section 110(k)(6) authorizes EPA to
correct any error in a rulemaking action
and does not restrict that authority to
correction of errors that other parties
might characterize as ‘‘trivial.’’ By its
plain terms, EPA’s authority under
section 110(k)(6) extends broadly to
‘‘action approving, disapproving, or
promulgating any plan or plan revision
(or part thereof), area designation,
redesignation, classification, or
reclassification.’’ Similarly, by its plain
terms EPA’s authority is not limited
with respect to the nature or seriousness
of the error, i.e., it is not restricted to
correction of ‘‘trivial’’ errors.
EPA and the commenters appear to
agree on the fact that the revisions to
OAC 3745–17–03(B) that EPA proposed
to disapprove are important substantive
provisions. In EPA’s view, the
importance of these provisions makes it
necessary for EPA to clarify the fact that
the October 26, 2010, rulemaking did
not make any substantive revision to
these provisions, and EPA cannot be
considered to have lawfully acted on the
revisions provisions without
considering the comments for and
against its June 27, 2005, proposal to
disapprove them. Regardless of whether
the error was ‘‘trivial’’ or not, EPA has
concluded that the error warrants
correction pursuant the authority of
section 110(k)(6) (or under authorities
that EPA is not using in this action).
The commenters’ substantive
arguments regarding the merits of OAC
3745–17–03(B) are not germane here,
because they are not relevant to
determining whether the codification
contained in EPA’s October 26, 2010,
action was an erroneous description of
that rulemaking action. The only issue
in this action is EPA’s correction of the
error. Moreover, now that the state has
withdrawn the submission seeking
substantive revisions to OAC 3745–17–
03(B), these comments are moot.
Comment: The commenter, in
describing EPA’s actions, states that
‘‘[i]n 2010, . . . it appeared that U.S.
EPA approved [OAC] 3745–17–03 in its
entirety.’’
Response: The commenter evidently
agrees that EPA had only ‘‘appeared’’ to
have approved substantive revisions to
OAC 3745–17–03(B) in the October 26,
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2010, action, because that is how they
themselves describe what occurred.
Comment: The commenter made
several assertions that it believes
preclude EPA from finalizing this error
correction. First, the commenter
‘‘object[ed] to U.S. EPA’s statement that
a comment period was not required in
issuing [the correction EPA published
on April 3, 2013].’’ The commenter
stated that section 110(k)(6) dictates
how EPA should make corrections to
past rulemakings. The commenter also
noted that section 110(k)(6) in particular
requires that an error made through
notice and comment rulemaking can
only be corrected through notice and
comment rulemaking. The commenter
asserted that EPA’s April 3, 2013, action
to effectuate the correction of the
October 26, 2010, action was invalid
because it failed to meet this
requirement of section 110(k)(6).
Response: While EPA continues to
believe that the Administrative
Procedures Act provides independent
authority for agencies to issue
corrections, that authority was not the
basis of this rulemaking. The
commenter submitted a petition for
reconsideration requesting that EPA
publish notice and solicit comment
pursuant to its error correction authority
under Clean Air Act section 110(k)(6).
EPA granted that request, and this
action is the final step of the requested
error correction rulemaking. The
commenter objected to the procedure
EPA used to correct the error in the
April 3, 2013, rulemaking, but that
rulemaking is being replaced by this
rulemaking under section 110(k)(6).
Thus, comments concerning the
procedure EPA should or should not
have followed with respect to the April
3, 2013, rulemaking are not relevant and
in fact are made moot by this action. In
short, EPA is correcting the error by the
procedure that the commenter
advocated.
Comment: The commenter also
objected that EPA did not have ‘‘good
cause’’ (in its April 3, 2013, rulemaking)
under the Administrative Procedures
Act section 553(b) to make corrections
without undergoing notice and
comment. The commenter asserted its
view that notice and comment (for
EPA’s April 3, 2013, action) was ‘‘not
impracticable, unnecessary or contrary
to the public interest.’’ In other words,
the commenter disagreed with EPA’s
determination that there was a good
cause exception to the normal
requirements for notice and comment,
given the nature of error at issue.
Response: EPA disagrees with the
commenter’s conclusion that correction
of what was essentially a typographical
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error requires full notice and comment
rulemaking in all cases. Nevertheless,
EPA notes that this comment suggests
that the commenter acknowledged that
Administrative Procedures Act section
553(b) authorizes corrections, even
without notice and opportunity for
comment, so long as EPA adequately
justifies the decision not to undergo
notice and opportunity for comment. In
any case, EPA concludes that this
rulemaking does not invoke that
authority to forego notice and comment
for good cause, and this action makes
moot the rulemaking (published April 3,
2013) that did invoke that authority.
Comment: The commenter also
objected to EPA’s description of the
error in the October 26, 2010, action as
essentially a typographical error. The
commenter claimed that ‘‘[t]he Utilities
did not submit comments [at the time of
EPA’s October 26, 2010, rulemaking]
because U.S. EPA approved Ohio Adm.
Code 3745–17–03 in its entirety as the
notice indicated. Had the Utilities
understood that these rules were
selective to subpart (A), the Utilities
may have submitted comments on this
proposal.’’
Response: As an initial matter, EPA
notes that the commenter’s claim
supports the Agency’s view that the
error in the October 26, 2010, action
engendered confusion and
misunderstanding among some affected
parties. The commenter speculates that
had EPA’s October 26, 2010, rulemaking
used preamble language and a
codification that more clearly identified
that the only revision to OAC 3745–17–
03 that EPA was approving was the
cross reference in OAC 3745–17–03(A),
it might have commented. Presumably
those comments would have urged EPA
to approve portions of OAC 3745–17–03
that were outside the scope and purpose
of the applicable state submission,
which with respect to OAC 3745–17–03
only requested the revision of the cross
reference in OAC 3745–17–03(A). In
such a hypothetical situation, EPA
presumably would have responded to
those comments by explaining that it
was not approving any revision to OAC
3745–17–03 beyond the cross reference
in OAC 3745–17–03(A) and that
comments beyond that narrow issue
were beyond the scope of the October
26, 2010, rulemaking.
In any case, the commenter has now
had the opportunity to comment on the
very issue that it speculated it would
have commented on under the 2010
conditions it hypothesized. The
proposed rulemaking for this error
correction action proposed to find that
rulemaking on portions of OAC 3745–
17–03 other than OAC 3745–17–03(A)
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in the 2010 air quality standards
rulemaking would have been outside
the scope of that rulemaking. Thus, EPA
solicited comment on precisely the
issue that the commenter speculated it
would have commented on in its
hypothesized 2010 circumstances, i.e.,
whether or not rulemaking on OAC
3745–17–03(B) would have been an
appropriate part of the 2010 rulemaking
on Ohio’s air quality standards
submittal. Of note is that in the actual,
present circumstances, the commenter
had the benefit of express EPA
statements in the February 7, 2014,
proposal, stating that any action in
response to Ohio’s submittal of
September 10, 2009, on portions of OAC
3745–17–03 other than OAC 3745–17–
03(A) would be outside the scope of the
rulemaking because it would not be
pertinent to the SIP revision request that
EPA was considering.
Finally, EPA notes that the
commenter did in fact comment, to urge
approval of revisions in OAC 3745–17–
03(B), without contesting EPA’s view
that these provisions are outside the
scope of the relevant state submission
and EPA’s rulemaking thereon. As
explained in the proposal for this
action, those revisions were not at issue
in its October 26, 2010, rulemaking and
are not at issue in this error correction.
EPA regrets the inconvenience to all
parties that arose from the error in its
October 26, 2010, rulemaking. However,
the point here is that it is unnecessary
to speculate on how the commenter
would have commented on the October
26, 2010, rulemaking had that
rulemaking more clearly stated that the
only revision to OAC 3745–17–03 under
consideration was the revision to the
cross reference in OAC 3745–17–03(A).
The commenter has now had the
opportunity to comment on the
applicable issues, and EPA is addressing
its comments here.
Comment: The commenter also
objected to EPA’s statements in the
proposal for this action that it is
correcting what is essentially a
typographical error. The commenter
asserted that this ‘‘correction is not
trivial.’’
Response: The commenter did not
explain its substantive grounds for
objecting to EPA’s proposed error
correction. The commenter omits any
rationale for why the significance of the
provisions of OAC 3745–17–03(B)
would justify labeling the mistaken
codification in EPA’s October 26, 2010,
rulemaking as anything other than an
error or why, regardless of label, the
misleading codification does not
warrant correction. For example, the
commenter implies that a significance
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criterion applies in judging whether a
statement is in error, as if an action with
significant ramifications cannot be in
error or that errors cannot have
significant consequences. However, the
commenter offered no rationale for why
the misstatements in the October 26,
2010, rulemaking, whatever the
significance of those misstatements,
should not be considered to be in error.
EPA’s proposed rulemaking provides
extensive discussion of why EPA
believes that the codification in its
October 26, 2010, action was in error,
including multiple reasons that
demonstrate that EPA did not intend
and could not have intended to approve
provisions in OAC 3745–17–03 that
were beyond the stated purpose of
Ohio’s submission, which with respect
to OAC 3745–17–03 was only to revise
the cross reference in OAC 3745–17–
03(A). Conspicuously absent from the
commenter’s comments is any specific
argument contesting EPA’s rationale for
this error correction, be it to question
EPA’s interpretation of Ohio’s
September 10, 2009, submission, to
dispute that EPA did not intend and
could not have intended to take action
on OAC 3745–17–03(B), or to challenge
EPA’s assertion that in any case there
has been no legally valid action on OAC
3745–17–03(B) because EPA has not
addressed pertinent comments on its
prior proposed disapproval of that
separate revision (including comments
that the commenter itself attests to
making).
Comment: The commenter states, ‘‘the
Utilities disagree with U.S. EPA’s
assertion that its ‘correction’ does not
allow substantive comments on Ohio
Adm. Code 3745–17–03.’’ The
commenter further asserted that ‘‘U.S.
EPA’s action is essentially making
Ohio’s SIP more stringent than it was
when it approved Ohio Adm. Code
3745–17–03 in 2010. . . . [Therefore,]
the Utilities believe that substantive
comments on Ohio Adm. Code 3745–
17–03 are proper and should be
considered by U.S. EPA.’’
Response: These comments
misrepresent EPA’s assertion,
mischaracterize EPA’s action, and
provide no rationale for EPA to change
its views on relevant matters. EPA’s
proposed rulemaking states: ‘‘any
substantive revisions to OAC 3745–17–
03, including any revisions to OAC
3745–17–03(B)(1), are not at issue in
this rulemaking. Only comments
regarding EPA’s correction of the error
in the October 26, 2010, action are
germane to this rulemaking under
section 110(k)(6).’’ The commenter may
elect to make comments that are not
germane, and the commenter has
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exercised its right to do so, though the
commenter has not challenged EPA’s
proposed rationale as to the scope of
comments that should be considered
germane. For example, even if EPA’s
action could be misconstrued as a
substantive revision to the approved SIP
(which it is not), and whether the newer
version of OAC 3745–17–03(B) is less
stringent than the older version (as the
commenter contended in these
comments) or not (as the commenter
contended in its attached comments
from 2005), the commenter does not
explain why this asserted change in
stringency justifies predicating EPA’s
action to correct an error on the
substantive merits of erroneously
codified provisions. Therefore, EPA
concludes that comments as to the
substantive merits of OAC 3745–17–
03(B) are not germane to this action,
which only addresses the error that
occurred in the October 26, 2010, action
pertaining to Ohio EPA’s submission
regarding its air quality standards rules.
Similarly, the commenter
mischaracterized EPA’s proposed error
action, asserting that EPA is hereby
removing an approval of portions of
OAC 3745–17–03 that, it asserted, EPA
approved in the October 26, 2010,
action. The proposed rulemaking
explained at length that EPA cannot
have approved any portion of 3745–17–
03 in 2010 other than the cross reference
in OAC 3745–17–03(A), and so the
action EPA proposed clarifies the
approved SIP without changing the
substance of what has actually been
approved. Again, the commenter
provided no rationale for adopting its
views as to the nature of EPA’s
proposed action rather than the views
EPA proposed.
Chamber et al.
Comment: The commenter provided
an extensive description of provisions
in OAC 3745–17–03(B). The commenter
also provided a history of this provision,
including Ohio’s submission of the
provision to EPA in June 2003, EPA’s
proposal to disapprove the provision in
June 2005, the (erroneous) appearance
of EPA approving the provision on
October 26, 2010, the EPA correction of
this appearance on April 3, 2013,
without reference to correction
authority in Clean Air Act section
110(k)(6), a petition for EPA to
reconsider this correction, and EPA’s
proposal published on February 7, 2014,
to make this correction under the
authority of Clean Air Act section
110(k)(6).
Response: EPA generally agrees with
the commenters recitation of the facts,
but does not agree with the implication
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that ‘‘appearing’’ to approve the revision
means that it was in fact approved.
Moreover, this portion of these
comments provides background
information and does not urge any
changes to EPA’s views underlying the
relevant proposed action, and so no
detailed review of this portion of these
comments is warranted. Any history of
the provisions of OAC 3745–17–03(B)
should also note that Ohio (subsequent
to these comments) has withdrawn its
submission that sought approval of the
provision.
Comment: The commenter stated that
it ‘‘submit[ted] these comments for two
reasons. First, we would like to briefly
address EPA’s comment that the COMS
provision is ‘significant and substantive’
and ‘would allow significantly more
opacity during certain periods.’ This
appears to be a reference to [text in
EPA’s June 2005 proposed rulemaking
(at 70 FR 36903), quoted in the
comment].’’
The commenter raised several
objections to these EPA statements. The
commenter asserted that the scenario
EPA discussed in the June 2005
proposed disapproval, intended as an
example case in which the revised
version of OAC 3745–17–03(B)
‘‘allow[s] excess opacity on occasions
that excess opacity is currently
prohibited,’’ to reflect an unlikely
pattern of operation that would not be
expected to be identified as a violation
using the reference method (Method 9)
of the unrevised rule. ‘‘In summary, the
alternative of continuous instrumental
monitoring of in-stack opacity in lieu of
periodic Method 9 visible emission
observations may be ‘significant and
substantive’ in terms of imposing more
stringent performance obligations, but it
certainly [is] not a ‘significant and
substantive’ relaxation of the
performance obligation where Method 9
is the SIP reference test for opacity.’’
Response: The commenter is correct
that the pertinent statement in the
February 7, 2014, proposed rulemaking
reflects the views expressed in the cited
statement in EPA’s June 27, 2005,
proposed rulemaking. The commenter
also observed that EPA has not
completed rulemaking pursuant to this
June 2005 proposed disapproval. EPA’s
purpose for making these statements in
the proposal for this error correction
was to provide context and to explain
the significance of the error, not to take
a substantive position. To be clear, in
the June 2005 proposal, EPA proposed
to find that the revised version of OAC
3745–17–03(B) would have allowed
significantly more opacity during
certain periods and that the state had
failed to provide a section 110(l) or
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68463
section 193 analysis to justify the
resulting relaxation; subsequently, EPA
received comments disputing that
finding, and EPA has not yet taken final
action on that proposal.
Because Ohio has withdrawn its June
2003 submission, however, EPA will be
conducting no further rulemaking on
that submission. Therefore, it is no
longer germane to any ongoing
rulemaking whether Ohio’s June 2003
submission would have tightened or
relaxed the stringency of Ohio’s existing
SIP. In any case, the desirability of
clarifying the status of OAC 3745–17–
03(B) is not contingent on any final
judgment regarding the effect of
previously submitted revisions to OAC
3745–17–03(B) on allowable opacity. In
its February 7, 2014, proposal, EPA
sought merely to explain why the error
in its October 26, 2010, final rule
warranted correction. Comments from
the Ohio Utilities Group discussed
above suggest that the provisions of
OAC 3745–17–03(B), and the associated
relaxation of requirements, are too
important to be the subject of an error
correction. These comments from the
Chamber et al. argue that the provisions
of OAC 3745–17–03(B) are not a
‘‘significant and substantive’’ relaxation
of the opacity-related requirements and
in fact may be a ‘‘significant and
substantive’’ tightening of performance
obligations. Regardless of these
conflicting comments, three parties have
concluded that the status of OAC 3745–
17–03(B) is sufficiently important to
comment on rulemaking proposing to
clarify the status of this rule. Even aside
from questions regarding the substantive
consequences of revisions to OAC 3745–
17–03(B), EPA seeks clarity regarding
which rules have been approved into
the SIP, especially for rules that prompt
significant substantive interest.
Consequently, EPA has concluded that
it is important to clarify the scope of
EPA’s rulemaking on Ohio’s submittal
addressing air quality standards and to
correct the errors in the October 26,
2010, action that created a
misimpression that EPA had approved
OAC 3745–17–03(B)as a part of the SIP.
Comment: The commenter also asked
that EPA complete its rulemaking action
on the June 2003 SIP revision that EPA
addressed in the June 2005 proposed
disapproval.
Response: Ohio has withdrawn the
pertinent elements of its June 2003 SIP
revision submission. Thus, no portion of
this submission remains pending.
III. What action is EPA taking?
Pursuant to section 110(k)(6), EPA is
determining that its October 26, 2010,
rulemaking was in error to the extent
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that it appeared to approve revisions to
OAC 3745–17–03 beyond the revision to
the cross reference in OAC 3745–17–
03(A). Through this action, EPA is
clarifying that in the October 26, 2010,
action, the Agency did not approve any
revisions to OAC 3745–17–03 except for
the specific revision to the cross
reference in OAC 3745–17–03(A)
requested by the state. But for that
change, the currently applicable version
of OAC 3745–17–03 in the Ohio SIP is
the version effective in the state on
January 31, 1998, approved by EPA on
October 16, 2007. The currently
applicable version of OAC 3745–17–03
in the Ohio SIP does not contain any
revisions addressed in EPA’s proposed
approval and disapproval on June 27,
2005. This action establishes that the
codification of EPA’s October 26, 2010,
action, in relevant part at 40 CFR
52.1870(c)(151)(i)(A), is clarified
pursuant to the authority of Clean Air
Act section 110(k)(6) to codify the
approval of only the revised cross
reference in OAC 3745–17–03(A) and
not of any other portions of OAC 3745–
17–03. In particular, EPA in that action
did not approve any revisions related to
OAC 3745–17–03(B).
On April 3, 2013, EPA used its
authority under section 553 of the
Administrative Procedures Act to
amend the erroneous codification in its
October 26, 2010, rulemaking without
notice and comment rulemaking. In that
rulemaking, EPA corrected the
erroneous statements and the
misleading codification to reflect more
clearly that EPA had only approved the
one narrow revision requested by the
state in OAC 3745–17–03, i.e., the
revision of the cross reference in OAC
3745–17–03(A). Thus, effective April 3,
2013, the Code of Federal Regulations
has properly reflected the corrected
codification. In response to a petition
for reconsideration, EPA today is
replacing that prior correction with an
error correction pursuant to section
110(k)(6). Nevertheless, during the
pendency of the current rulemaking
pursuant to section 110(k)(6), EPA opted
not to stay or revoke the correction
action of April 3, 2013, to avoid
exacerbating the misimpressions caused
by the October 26, 2010, error.
Therefore, the status quo is that the
Code of Federal Regulations already
reflects the corrected codification.
Ordinarily, a rulemaking establishing
a corrected codification would include
not just a preamble but would also
include a codification section, in which
the Office of the Federal Register is
instructed to amend the applicable
sections of the Code of Federal
Regulations. However, this action
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involves circumstances in which the
pertinent section of the Code of Federal
Regulations already correctly reflects
the EPA approved version of OAC
3745–17–03, as a result of action taken
April 3, 2013. Conceptually, this action
replaces the pertinent revisions to the
Code of Federal Regulations
promulgated on April 3, 2013, with
identical revisions pursuant to this
action. In practical terms, the net effect
of this action is no change in the Code
of Federal Regulations. It is
inappropriate to provide a null set of
instructions, to instruct the Office of the
Federal Register to make no changes to
the Code of Federal Regulations.
Therefore, this action includes no
instructions to the Office of the Federal
Register, no requested revisions to the
Code of Federal Regulations, and indeed
no codification section. As a result, the
Office of the Federal Register’s records
will show the pertinent revisions as
being made April 3, 2013. Nevertheless,
this action should be viewed as
replacing those corrections,
promulgated under the authority of
Administrative Procedures Act section
553, with identical corrections,
promulgated under the authority of
Clean Air Action section 110(k)(6).
IV. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
Under the Clean Air Act, the
Administrator is required to approve a
SIP submission that complies with the
provisions of the Clean Air Act and
applicable Federal regulations. 42
U.S.C. 7410(k); 40 CFR 52.02(a). Thus,
in reviewing SIP submissions, EPA’s
role is to approve state choices,
provided that they meet the criteria of
the Clean Air Act. This action merely
corrects an error in EPA’s prior action
and does not impose additional
requirements beyond those imposed by
state law. For that reason, this action:
• Is not a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ subject to review by the Office
of Management and Budget under
Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735,
October 4, 1993);
• Does not impose an information
collection burden under the provisions
of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
• Is certified as not having a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.);
• Does not contain any unfunded
mandate or significantly or uniquely
affect small governments, as described
in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (Public Law 104–4);
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• Does not have Federalism
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999);
• Is not an economically significant
regulatory action based on health or
safety risks subject to Executive Order
13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997);
• Is not a significant regulatory action
subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR
28355, May 22, 2001);
• Is not subject to requirements of
Section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) because
application of those requirements would
be inconsistent with the CAA; and
• Does not provide EPA with the
discretionary authority to address, as
appropriate, disproportionate human
health or environmental effects, using
practicable and legally permissible
methods, under Executive Order 12898
(59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
In addition, this rule does not have
tribal implications as specified by
Executive Order 13175 (65 FR 67249,
November 9, 2000), because the SIP is
not approved to apply in Indian country
located in the state, and EPA notes that
it will not impose substantial direct
costs on tribal governments or preempt
tribal law.
The Congressional Review Act, 5
U.S.C. 801 et seq., as added by the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996, generally provides
that before a rule may take effect, the
agency promulgating the rule must
submit a rule report, which includes a
copy of the rule, to each House of the
Congress and to the Comptroller General
of the United States. EPA will submit a
report containing this action and other
required information to the U.S. Senate,
the U.S. House of Representatives, and
the Comptroller General of the United
States prior to publication of the rule in
the Federal Register. A major rule
cannot take effect until 60 days after it
is published in the Federal Register.
This action is not a ‘‘major rule’’ as
defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
Under section 307(b)(1) of the Clean
Air Act, petitions for judicial review of
this action must be filed in the United
States Court of Appeals for the
appropriate circuit by January 4, 2016.
Filing a petition for reconsideration by
the Administrator of this final rule does
not affect the finality of this action for
the purposes of judicial review nor does
it extend the time within which a
petition for judicial review may be filed,
and shall not postpone the effectiveness
of such rule or action. This action may
not be challenged later in proceedings to
enforce its requirements. (See section
307(b)(2)).
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List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Intergovernmental relations,
Particulate matter, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Dated: October 22, 2015.
Susan Hedman,
Regional Administrator, Region 5.
[FR Doc. 2015–28095 Filed 11–4–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Office of the Secretary of the Interior
43 CFR Part 10
[NPS–WASO–NAGPRA–19087;
PPWOCRADN0–PCU00RP14.R50000]
RIN 1024–AE00
Disposition of Unclaimed Human
Remains, Funerary Objects, Sacred
Objects, or Objects of Cultural
Patrimony
Office of the Secretary, Interior.
Final rule.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
This final rule provides
procedures for the disposition of
unclaimed human remains, funerary
objects, sacred objects, or objects of
cultural patrimony excavated or
discovered on, and removed from,
Federal lands after November 16, 1990.
It implements section 3(b) of the Native
American Graves Protection and
Repatriation Act.
DATES: The rule is effective December 7,
2015.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Melanie O’Brien, Manager, National
NAGPRA Program, National Park
Service, 1849 C Street NW.,
Washington, DC 20240, telephone (202)
354–2204, email melanie_o’brien@
nps.gov.
SUMMARY:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with RULES
Background
The Secretary of the Interior
(Secretary) is responsible for
implementation of the Native American
Graves Protection and Repatriation Act
(NAGPRA or Act) (25 U.S.C. 3001 et
seq.), including the issuance of
appropriate regulations implementing
and interpreting its provisions.
NAGPRA addresses the rights of lineal
descendants, Indian tribes, and Native
Hawaiian organizations in certain
human remains, funerary objects, sacred
objects, and objects of cultural
patrimony, for which the Act uses the
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broader term ‘‘cultural items’’ (25 U.S.C.
3001(3)). Pursuant to Section 13 of
NAGPRA (25 U.S.C. 3011), the
Department of the Interior (Department)
published the initial rules to implement
NAGPRA in 1995 (60 FR 62158,
December 4, 1995); those rules are now
codified at 43 CFR part 10.
Subsequently, the Department
published additional rules concerning:
• Civil penalties (68 FR 16354, April
3, 2003);
• Future applicability (72 FR 13189,
March 21, 2007); and
• Disposition of culturally
unidentifiable human remains (75 FR
12378, March 15, 2010).
Section 3(b) of the Act (25 U.S.C. 3002
(b)) explicitly directs the Secretary to
publish regulations for the disposition
of unclaimed cultural items excavated
or discovered on, and removed from,
Federal lands after November 16, 1990.
When we published the NAGPRA
regulations on December 4, 1995, we
reserved 43 CFR 10.7 for this purpose.
This rule is limited to Federal lands,
as NAGPRA provides that ownership or
control of any cultural item excavated or
discovered on, and removed from, tribal
land after November 16, 1990, is in
either a known lineal descendant (for
human remains and associated funerary
objects) or in the Indian tribe from
whose tribal land the cultural items
were removed, and does not require the
lineal descendant or the Indian tribe to
make a claim for the cultural items.
Consultation regarding a proposed
rule for § 10.7 began in 2005. On three
separate occasions, we consulted with
representatives of Indian tribes, Native
Hawaiian organizations, museums, and
scientific organizations. We also
consulted with the Native American
Graves Protection and Repatriation
Review Committee (Review Committee)
during its scheduled meetings in
Albuquerque, NM (November 2005);
Washington, DC (April 2007); Phoenix,
AZ (October 2007); and Washington, DC
(November 2010).
We published a proposed rule on
October 29, 2013 (78 FR 64436). Public
comment was invited for a 60-day
period, ending December 30, 2013. The
proposed rule also was posted on the
National Park Service’s National
NAGPRA Program Web site. The Review
Committee commented on the record on
the proposed rule at a public meeting on
November 6, 2013.
Summary of and Responses to
Comments on the Proposed Rule
During the comment period, we
received 27 written comments on the
proposed rule, contained in 20 separate
submissions from 5 Indian tribes, 1
PO 00000
Frm 00045
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
68465
Indian organization, 1 non-federally
recognized Indian group, 1 Native
Hawaiian organization, 1 museum, 1
scientific organization, 3 Federal
entities, 6 individual members of the
public, and 1 anonymous commenter.
All relevant comments on the proposed
rule were considered during the final
rulemaking.
Final Rule 43 CFR 10.2 Definition of
‘‘Unclaimed Cultural Items’’
Comment 1: Four commenters stated
that the definition of unclaimed cultural
items should include the phrase ‘‘as
used in § 10.7 of this part.’’
Our Response: The term ‘‘unclaimed
cultural items’’ is used only in § 10.7
and therefore the specific reference is
not needed.
Comment 2: Three commenters stated
that the definition of unclaimed cultural
items should be expanded and the
difference between the categories of
unclaimed cultural items be clarified.
One of these commenters added that the
definition should provide a timeframe
that structures how long cultural items
must be held by the Federal agency
prior to being classified as unclaimed.
Our Response: We agree. In the final
rule, we have revised the definition of
unclaimed cultural items and clarified
the difference between the categories.
We have included a timeframe.
Comment 3: Four commenters stated
that the definition of unclaimed cultural
items imposes an inappropriate time
limit on Indian tribes and Native
Hawaiian organizations to make claims
for cultural items. One of these
commenters added that the definition
assumes Federal agencies have been
proactive and have provided notice to
all potential claimants.
Our Response: A potential claimant
may make a claim for unclaimed
cultural items at any time prior to
transfer or reinterment under this rule.
While the rule establishes a timeframe
for cultural items to become unclaimed,
there is no timeline imposed for Federal
agencies to transfer or to reinter cultural
items. We feel the timeframes
established by the definitions in this
final rule strike an appropriate balance
between assuring Federal agencies that
the NAGPRA process will end at a
certain time and granting non-claimant
Indian tribes and Native Hawaiian
organizations an opportunity to request
the transfer of these cultural items.
Comment 4: One commenter stated
that the definition of ‘‘disposition’’ in
§ 10.2(g)(5) should be changed to
include disposition of unclaimed
cultural items.
E:\FR\FM\05NOR1.SGM
05NOR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 214 (Thursday, November 5, 2015)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 68458-68465]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-28095]
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA-R05-OAR-2009-0807; FRL-9936-54-Region 5]
Air Plan Approval; Ohio; Test Methods; Error Correction
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is determining that
a portion of an October 26, 2010, action was in error and is making a
correction pursuant to section 110(k)(6) of the Clean Air Act. The
October 26, 2010, EPA action approved various revisions to Ohio
regulations in the EPA approved state implementation plan (SIP). The
revisions were intended to consolidate air quality standards into a new
chapter of rules and to adjust the cross references accordingly in
various related Ohio rules. These changes included a specific revision
to the cross reference in the Ohio rule pertaining to methods for
measurements for comparison with the particulate matter air quality
standards. This final correction action removes any misperception that
EPA approved any revision to the pertinent rule other than the revised
cross reference. This action will therefore assure that the
codification of the October 26, 2010, action is in accord with the
actual substance of the action.
DATES: This final rule is effective on December 7, 2015.
ADDRESSES: EPA has established a docket for this action under Docket ID
No. EPA-R05-OAR-2009-0807. All documents in the docket are listed on
the www.regulations.gov Web site. Although listed in the index, some
information is not publicly available, i.e., Confidential Business
Information (CBI) or other information whose disclosure is restricted
by statute. Certain other material, such as copyrighted material, is
not placed on the Internet and will be publicly available only in hard
copy form. Publicly available docket materials are available either
electronically through www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at the
Environmental Protection Agency, Region 5, Air and Radiation Division,
77 West Jackson Boulevard, Chicago, Illinois 60604. This facility is
open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding
Federal holidays. We recommend that you telephone John Summerhays,
Environmental Scientist, at (312) 886-6067 before visiting the Region 5
office.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: John Summerhays, Environmental
Scientist, Attainment Planning and Maintenance Section, Air Programs
Branch (AR-18J), Environmental Protection Agency, Region 5, 77 West
Jackson Boulevard, Chicago, Illinois 60604, (312) 886-6067,
summerhays.john@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This supplementary information section is
arranged as follows:
I. Summary of EPA's Proposed Rulemaking
II. Comments and EPA's Responses
III. What action is EPA taking?
IV. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Summary of EPA's Proposed Rulemaking
On June 4, 2003, Ohio submitted a variety of revisions to the EPA
approved version of Ohio Administrative Code (OAC) 3745-17 in the
state's SIP, which regulates particulate matter and opacity from
affected sources. While EPA subsequently approved many of these
revisions, EPA published action on June 27, 2005, proposing to
disapprove specific submitted revisions in OAC 3745-17-03(B) that in
EPA's view relaxed existing SIP opacity limitations without an adequate
analysis under section 110(l) or section 193 of the Clean Air Act.\1\
Consistent with this proposed disapproval, the version of OAC 3745-17-
03(B) submitted by the state on June 4, 2003, was not, and is not, an
approved provision of the Ohio SIP.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ See 70 FR 36901 (June 27, 2005).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On September 10, 2009, for purposes of consolidating its existing
SIP rules identifying applicable air quality standards, and to adjust
the cross references between rules accordingly, Ohio submitted
additional revisions to several of its existing rules to EPA for
approval into the SIP. Most notably, these rule revisions included a
modification to the existing cross reference in OAC 3745-17-03(A),
which was necessary because the ambient particulate matter measurement
method identified in this paragraph was for purposes of assessing
attainment with the ambient air quality standards now located in OAC
3745-25-02, rather than in OAC 3745-17-02.
On October 26, 2010, at 75 FR 65572, EPA published a direct final
action approving the relevant revisions in the September 10, 2009,
submission. In the preamble and in the codification of the October 26,
2010, action, EPA erroneously listed the approved SIP revisions as
including the entirety of OAC 3745-17-03, rather than specifying more
precisely that the approval as it pertained to OAC 3745-17-03 applied
only to the revised cross reference in OAC 3745-17-03(A). This error
left the misimpression that EPA had approved other significant
substantive revisions in OAC 3745-17-03, including those in OAC 3745-
17-03(B) that EPA had previously proposed to disapprove. The
codification in the October 26, 2010, action with respect to OAC 3745-
17-03 should have been explicitly limited to OAC 3745-17-03(A), to
reflect the EPA approval of only the revised cross reference.
EPA subsequently recognized that the codification erroneously left
the misimpression that it had approved more of OAC 3745-17-03 than the
revision of the cross reference in OAC 3745-17-03(A). On April 3, 2013,
at 78 FR 19990, EPA published action to correct the error. EPA took
this action pursuant to its general rulemaking authority under
Administrative Procedures Act section 553. Two parties challenged EPA's
April 3, 2013, action, and one of these parties also filed a petition
for reconsideration of that action, objecting that EPA failed to
correct the error in the October 26, 2010, action in accordance with
the procedures of section 110(k)(6) of the Clean Air Act.
EPA responded to the petition for reconsideration by agreeing to
take this action pursuant to section 110(k)(6), as requested by the
petitioner. Accordingly, EPA published proposed rulemaking on February
7, 2014, using its authority under section 110(k)(6) to correct errors
in its rulemaking of October 26, 2010.\2\ Given the petitioners'
expressed interest in commenting on EPA's action, EPA elected to use
its authority under section 110(k)(6) for this action because, under
these circumstances, it would provide the best mechanism to correct the
apparent misunderstandings concerning the error in the October 26,
2010, action.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ See 79 FR 7412 (Feb. 7, 2014).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
EPA's February 7, 2014, proposal provides an extensive description
of the error in its October 26, 2010, rulemaking, provided in
subsections entitled, ``What was the error in description and
codification?'', ``What precipitated this error?'', and ``Why was it
evident that this was an error?'' It is not necessary to repeat that
detailed explanation here. EPA proposed to correct the error to remove
any misimpression in its October 26, 2010,
[[Page 68459]]
rulemaking that EPA had approved any revisions to OAC 3745-17-03 other
than the cross reference in OAC 3745-17-03(A). Specifically, EPA
proposed to take action pursuant to Clean Air Act section 110(k)(6)
repromulgating the correction published on April 3, 2013. EPA solicited
comments on this proposed error correction, while noting that any
comments on the technical or legal merits of certain substantive
revisions to OAC 3745-17-03 (e.g., the opacity-related provisions in
OAC 3745-17-03(B)) or on the pending proposed disapproval of those
provisions would not be germane to this error correction rulemaking.
EPA intended to correct the error in the October 26, 2010, action
first and then separately to complete the action to address the merits
of the substantive revisions to OAC 3745-17-03 in the June 4, 2003, SIP
submission that were the subject of the June 27, 2005, proposed
disapproval. To this end, EPA published a supplemental proposal on June
26, 2014, reopening comment on its prior proposed disapproval of
revisions to OAC 3745-17-03.\3\ Subsequently, however, Ohio has
withdrawn the portion of the June 4, 2003, submission that EPA proposed
to disapprove.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ See 79 FR 36277 (June 26, 2014).
\4\ See letter from Craig W. Butler, Director, Ohio EPA, to
Susan Hedman, Regional Administrator, USEPA Region 5, dated
September 5, 2014, ``request[ing] withdrawal of [Ohio's] June 4,
2003 request to incorporate paragraph (B)(1)(b) into Ohio's SIP.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accordingly, since the provisions is withdrawn, EPA does not need
to complete action on the June 4, 2003, SIP submission. Significantly,
this also confirms that the submitted substantive revisions to OAC
3745-17-03 are not part of the EPA approved SIP and that the EPA's
October 26, 2010, action could not have revised those elements of the
existing version of OAC 3745-17-03 in the SIP, inadvertently or
otherwise. Except for an amendment to the cross reference to ambient
air quality standards in OAC 3745-17-03(A) (which EPA approved on
October 26, 2010), the version of OAC 3745-17-03 in the SIP remains the
version effective in the state on January 31, 1998, approved by EPA on
October 16, 2007.
II. Comments and EPA's Responses
EPA received comments on its proposed error correction from three
parties: (i) The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency (Ohio EPA); (ii)
the Ohio Utility Group; and (iii) a group including the Ohio Chamber of
Commerce, Ohio Manufacturers Association, and Ohio Chemistry Technology
Council (Chamber et al.). The following are significant adverse
comments from each commenter and EPA's responses.
Ohio EPA
Comment: The commenter asserted that: ``On February 7, 2014, U.S.
EPA proposed, as an error correction, to remove from Ohio's State
Implementation Plan (SIP) a previously approved (October 26, 2010)
portion of OAC Rule 3745-17-07 regarding methods for measurements to
determine compliance with Ohio's 20% opacity limitation.'' \5\ With
this statement, the commenter is implying that EPA in fact approved
substantive revisions to OAC 3745-17-03 in the October 26, 2010,
action, rather than merely approved the cross reference in OAC 3745-17-
03(A). The commenter suggested that EPA acted on ``the entirety'' of
the revisions to OAC 3745-17-03.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ EPA's October 26, 2010, rulemaking makes no reference to OAC
3745-17-07 (containing opacity limits). EPA presumes that the
commenter intends to refer to OAC 3745-17-03, which among other
provisions has provisions relating to measurement of opacity.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Response: EPA disagrees with the commenter's premise that the
Agency approved any portion of OAC 3745-17-03 other than the revision
to the cross reference in OAC 3745-17-03(A). EPA's February 17, 2014,
proposed action rule provides an extensive explanation of the error
that occurred in the October 26, 2010, action and the genesis of the
error. Ohio's clearly stated purpose in making the September 10, 2009,
submission was to consolidate its existing SIP provisions relating to
ambient air quality standards and to revise certain cross references in
existing approved SIP rules in order to reflect that reorganization.
The specific SIP revisions at issue in the state's submission were
reflected in redline and the redlined document identified the cross
reference in OAC 3745-17-03(A) as the only revision relevant to OAC
3745-17-03. This indicates that approval of any substantive revisions
in OAC 3745-17-03(B) would have been beyond the scope of the
rulemaking. Moreover, EPA had already proposed to disapprove revisions
to OAC 3745-17-03(B) on June 27, 2005, EPA received numerous,
substantial comments for and against that proposed disapproval, and the
rulemaking of October 26, 2010, provided no evidence of consideration
of any of these comments. Although the commenter described EPA's
proposed error correction action as an action to ``remove . . . a
previously approved'' portion of rule, this is simply incorrect. EPA
did not ``previously approve'' the portions of OAC 3745-17-03 that the
Agency rulemaking of October 26, 2010, did not substantively address.
EPA fully acknowledged in the February 17, 2014, proposal that the
error that occurred in the October 26, 2010, action was the result of
misunderstandings and miscommunications that it is seeking to rectify
in this final error correction action. EPA is taking this final action
in order to avoid further confusion on the part of regulated entities,
regulators, and members of the public.
Comment: The commenter stated that it ``firmly believes [that the
provision in OAC 3745-17-03(B)] is fully approvable.'' The commenter
explained that it was ``attaching, and reaffirming'' its prior comments
on EPA's proposed disapproval of this provision in the June 27, 2005,
action. The commenter further requested that ``[c]onsideration should
be taken to the previous comments submitted by Ohio EPA and others
regarding the approvability of the provision at question in this
action.''
Response: As explained in the February 17, 2014, proposal for this
action, EPA is focusing this section 110(k)(6) rulemaking on the
specific error that occurred in the October 26, 2010, action. This
rulemaking is not addressing the substantive merits of any portion of
OAC 3745-17-03. Instead, this rulemaking is addressing whether EPA made
an error in its October 26, 2010, rulemaking by including a
codification that went beyond the scope of the rulemaking and whether
EPA should correct that error by correcting the codification to reflect
that the only portion of OAC 3745-17-03 that was addressed in that
rulemaking was the cross reference in OAC 3745-17-03(A). Accordingly,
the commenter's resubmission of its prior comments on the June 27,
2005, proposed disapproval is inappropriate and not germane to this
action.
In addition to being outside the scope of this error correction
action, EPA notes that the commenter's arguments also support EPA's
conclusion that the October 26, 2010, action was in error to the extent
that it appeared to approve any revision beyond the cross reference in
OAC 3745-17-03(A). The commenter explicitly acknowledged that EPA
previously received significant comments concerning the merits of OAC
3745-17-03(B), in particular comments that in the commenter's view
warrant reversal of EPA's prior proposed disapproval. Furthermore, the
commenter in effect argued that EPA has not adequately considered these
comments. This is fully consistent with EPA's own observation that its
October 26, 2010, rulemaking provided no
[[Page 68460]]
evidence of any consideration of public comments concerning OAC 3745-
17-03(B) whatsoever (again, because this provision was outside the
scope of that rulemaking). Thus, the commenter appeared to agree with
EPA's view that the October 26, 2010, rulemaking does not provide any
evidence of the consideration of comments regarding OAC 3745-17-03(B)
that would be necessary for any approval or disapproval of OAC 3745-17-
03(B) to be considered lawful. Moreover, the commenter did not appear
to dispute EPA's view that rulemaking on OAC 3745-17-03(B) could not be
considered a lawful and valid part of the October 26, 2010, rulemaking
even if it had been intended to be within the scope of the rulemaking.
As explained in the February 17, 2014, proposal for this action, EPA
had no such intentions and the fact that EPA did not address prior
substantive comments on the merits of OAC 3745-17-03(B) should have
alerted the commenter and other parties to this fact.
Finally, EPA acknowledges the commenter's request that that EPA
complete its consideration of comments on the merits of OAC 3745-17-
03(B), but such consideration is outside the scope of this rulemaking.
By separate action, EPA intended to address the merits of the
substantive revisions to OAC 3745-17-03 in the June 4, 2003, SIP
submission that were the subject of the June 27, 2005, proposed
disapproval. To this end, EPA published a supplemental proposal on June
26, 2014, reopening comment on its prior proposed disapproval of
certain substantive revisions to OAC 3745-17-03.\6\ Subsequently,
however, Ohio withdrew its submittal of revisions to OAC 3745-17-
03(B).\7\ This renders consideration of comments with respect to the
withdrawn submission moot, both for purposes of the June 27, 2005,
proposed disapproval and for purposes of this error correction action.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ See 79 FR 36277 (June 26, 2014).
\7\ See letter from Craig W. Butler, Director, Ohio EPA, to
Susan Hedman, Regional Administrator, USEPA Region 5, dated
September 5, 2014, which may be found in the docket for this final
action.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: The commenter objected that ``U.S. EPA has made certain
assertions regarding [OAC 3745-17-03(B)] that go beyond the scope of
this proposed correction. U.S. EPA refers to the provision as
`significant and substantive' and states the `unapproved' revisions
`would allow significantly more opacity during certain periods.' '' The
commenter disputed these statements. The commenter asserted its belief
that ``U.S. EPA has crossed the threshold and cannot go forward with
the package under 110(k), since U.S. EPA is now making a technical
argument as to why the previously approved SIP revision is no longer
acceptable.'' The commenter also argued that ``as a procedural matter,
U.S. EPA must start over from the beginning and outline and address the
entire technical issue in full and not use the 110(k) `error'
approach.''
Response: The premise of the commenter's arguments is that EPA's
February 17, 2014, action in effect proposed to finalize EPA's prior
proposed disapproval of certain portions of OAC 3745-17-03, not merely
correcting the error that led to the misimpression that EPA had already
approved the revisions in toto. The commenter is thereby ignoring EPA's
clear statements about the actual scope of this error correction.
As explained in the February 17, 2014, proposal for this action,
EPA is focusing this section 110(k)(6) rulemaking on the specific error
that occurred in the October 26, 2010, action. EPA provided extensive
discussion and explanation of the error that occurred in the October
26, 2010, action and why EPA could not be considered to have acted on
any revisions to OAC 3745-17-03 that were outside the scope of that
rulemaking. EPA explained the significance of OAC 3745-17-03(B) in the
February 17, 2014, proposal as a means of explaining why EPA considered
it important to correct the errors in its October 26, 2010, rulemaking.
EPA noted in passing that it had already proposed to disapprove certain
provisions for reasons that were already a matter of public record in
the Federal Register as a means of emphasizing that it could not have
approved those revisions in the October 26, 2010, action without an
explicit discussion and justification for any such approval.
The commenter appears to agree that the revisions in OAC 3745-17-
03(B) that it advocated for EPA to approve are significant and
substantive. EPA statements regarding the significance of the error,
however, cannot be considered to constitute final review of the merits
of the erroneously addressed provisions. The October 26, 2010, action
clearly did not address the merits of OAC 3745-17-03(B), and EPA's
action proposing to correct an error related to these provisions did
not address the merits of these provisions either.
The commenter disagreed in particular with EPA's characterization
of OAC 3745-17-03(B) in the February 17, 2014, proposal as allowing
significantly more opacity during certain periods. A more precise
statement would have been that EPA had proposed to disapprove the
pertinent revisions to OAC 3745-17-03(B) in the June 27, 2005, proposal
based in significant part on the view that the revisions would allow
significantly more opacity during certain periods. The commenter, along
with several other commenters, has disputed EPA's proposed views
regarding the merits of OAC 3745-17-03(B). As explained in detail in
the February 17, 2014, proposal for this error correction, however, EPA
did not intend, and could not have intended, to address the substantive
merits of those revisions in the October 26, 2010, action. Indeed, with
Ohio's withdrawal of its request for rulemaking on these provisions,
EPA will no longer be conducting final rulemaking on the merits of OAC
3745-17-03(B). Nevertheless, the more relevant point is that the
existence of these disputes as to the merits of OAC 3745-17-03(B)
illustrates the importance of correcting any errors that might create
the misimpression that EPA had completed its review of these issues.
EPA believes that the significance of the provisions in OAC 3745-17-
03(B) and the outstanding questions regarding whether those provisions
could have been approved consistent with CAA requirements provide added
value to correcting any misimpressions regarding the status of those
provisions, namely misimpressions reasserted in these comments that EPA
had already completed rulemaking on these provisions.
Contrary to the commenter's statement, EPA's proposed rulemaking to
correct the errors in its October 26, 2010, action was not based on a
technical argument regarding the merits of OAC 3745-17-03(B), including
any technical argument as to whether these provisions allow
significantly more opacity during certain periods. This assertion
regarding whether the now withdrawn revisions to OAC 3745-17-03 would
allow more opacity (made in EPA's 2005 proposed rulemaking addressing
the merits of Ohio's now withdrawn SIP revision and contested by
various commenters) illustrates the significance of the error in the
October 26, 2010, action. However, the commenter provided no reason why
characterization of the issue as significant and identification of any
of the unresolved issues that were not addressed in the October 26,
2010, rulemaking (or elsewhere) should preclude EPA from assuring that
the
[[Page 68461]]
October 26, 2010, rulemaking is characterized properly.
Comment: The commenter objected to EPA statements in a separate
unrelated rulemaking regarding SIP revisions for the State of Alabama.
The commenter referred to EPA statements that the commenter
characterized as citing ``the 2005 proposed disapproval of Ohio's
revision, in part, as justification for the proposed disapproval of
Alabama's revision.'' The commenter further asserted that this
``mislead[s] the readers of the Alabama proposal that Ohio's proposed
disapproval has followed its due course, when it has not.'' The
commenter requested that ``any action taken on the Alabama proposal
should not be used as justification for disapproving Ohio's
provision.''
Response: EPA acknowledges that the proposed action concerning the
State of Alabama mentioned the June 27, 2005, proposed disapproval of
the Ohio submission. The existence of that proposal was, and is, a
matter of record. EPA mentioned the June 27, 2005, proposed disapproval
merely as means of explaining its views on relevant issue, not as a
basis for a particular final action. The commenter did not explain why
this comment concerning a proposed action in another state is relevant
to the present error correction action concerning Ohio, nor does EPA
consider it germane to this final action. In any event, the state has
now withdrawn the portion of the submission that EPA proposed to
disapprove, so this comment is moot.
Ohio Utility Group
Comment: The commenter asserted that ``U.S. EPA's action is not
trivial and is not a mere `correction.' In support of this statement,
the commenter recited its view of the history of rulemaking on OAC
3745-17-03(B), including adoption by Ohio and proposed disapproval by
EPA. The commenter observed that EPA received extensive comments on the
June 27, 2005, proposed disapproval, but acknowledged that ``U.S. EPA
never finalized this proposed action and, based on a review of the
record, U.S. EPA never responded to comments submitted on this proposed
rule.'' The commenter presented a summary of arguments in support of
the merits of the opacity ``exemption'' in OAC 3745-17-03(B) that EPA
proposed to disapprove in the June 27, 2005, proposal, and concluded
that ``this exemption is technically defensible and the data [compiled
to formulate the exemption] were never rebutted by U.S. EPA.''
Response: The commenter did not elaborate on its argument that
EPA's proposed error correction action ``is not trivial'' or why EPA's
proposed action is not consistent with EPA's authority to correct
errors under section 110(k)(6). To the extent that the commenter is
arguing that EPA's authority under section 110(k)(6) is limited to
correcting ``trivial'' errors, EPA disagrees. On its face, section
110(k)(6) authorizes EPA to correct any error in a rulemaking action
and does not restrict that authority to correction of errors that other
parties might characterize as ``trivial.'' By its plain terms, EPA's
authority under section 110(k)(6) extends broadly to ``action
approving, disapproving, or promulgating any plan or plan revision (or
part thereof), area designation, redesignation, classification, or
reclassification.'' Similarly, by its plain terms EPA's authority is
not limited with respect to the nature or seriousness of the error,
i.e., it is not restricted to correction of ``trivial'' errors.
EPA and the commenters appear to agree on the fact that the
revisions to OAC 3745-17-03(B) that EPA proposed to disapprove are
important substantive provisions. In EPA's view, the importance of
these provisions makes it necessary for EPA to clarify the fact that
the October 26, 2010, rulemaking did not make any substantive revision
to these provisions, and EPA cannot be considered to have lawfully
acted on the revisions provisions without considering the comments for
and against its June 27, 2005, proposal to disapprove them. Regardless
of whether the error was ``trivial'' or not, EPA has concluded that the
error warrants correction pursuant the authority of section 110(k)(6)
(or under authorities that EPA is not using in this action).
The commenters' substantive arguments regarding the merits of OAC
3745-17-03(B) are not germane here, because they are not relevant to
determining whether the codification contained in EPA's October 26,
2010, action was an erroneous description of that rulemaking action.
The only issue in this action is EPA's correction of the error.
Moreover, now that the state has withdrawn the submission seeking
substantive revisions to OAC 3745-17-03(B), these comments are moot.
Comment: The commenter, in describing EPA's actions, states that
``[i]n 2010, . . . it appeared that U.S. EPA approved [OAC] 3745-17-03
in its entirety.''
Response: The commenter evidently agrees that EPA had only
``appeared'' to have approved substantive revisions to OAC 3745-17-
03(B) in the October 26, 2010, action, because that is how they
themselves describe what occurred.
Comment: The commenter made several assertions that it believes
preclude EPA from finalizing this error correction. First, the
commenter ``object[ed] to U.S. EPA's statement that a comment period
was not required in issuing [the correction EPA published on April 3,
2013].'' The commenter stated that section 110(k)(6) dictates how EPA
should make corrections to past rulemakings. The commenter also noted
that section 110(k)(6) in particular requires that an error made
through notice and comment rulemaking can only be corrected through
notice and comment rulemaking. The commenter asserted that EPA's April
3, 2013, action to effectuate the correction of the October 26, 2010,
action was invalid because it failed to meet this requirement of
section 110(k)(6).
Response: While EPA continues to believe that the Administrative
Procedures Act provides independent authority for agencies to issue
corrections, that authority was not the basis of this rulemaking. The
commenter submitted a petition for reconsideration requesting that EPA
publish notice and solicit comment pursuant to its error correction
authority under Clean Air Act section 110(k)(6). EPA granted that
request, and this action is the final step of the requested error
correction rulemaking. The commenter objected to the procedure EPA used
to correct the error in the April 3, 2013, rulemaking, but that
rulemaking is being replaced by this rulemaking under section
110(k)(6). Thus, comments concerning the procedure EPA should or should
not have followed with respect to the April 3, 2013, rulemaking are not
relevant and in fact are made moot by this action. In short, EPA is
correcting the error by the procedure that the commenter advocated.
Comment: The commenter also objected that EPA did not have ``good
cause'' (in its April 3, 2013, rulemaking) under the Administrative
Procedures Act section 553(b) to make corrections without undergoing
notice and comment. The commenter asserted its view that notice and
comment (for EPA's April 3, 2013, action) was ``not impracticable,
unnecessary or contrary to the public interest.'' In other words, the
commenter disagreed with EPA's determination that there was a good
cause exception to the normal requirements for notice and comment,
given the nature of error at issue.
Response: EPA disagrees with the commenter's conclusion that
correction of what was essentially a typographical
[[Page 68462]]
error requires full notice and comment rulemaking in all cases.
Nevertheless, EPA notes that this comment suggests that the commenter
acknowledged that Administrative Procedures Act section 553(b)
authorizes corrections, even without notice and opportunity for
comment, so long as EPA adequately justifies the decision not to
undergo notice and opportunity for comment. In any case, EPA concludes
that this rulemaking does not invoke that authority to forego notice
and comment for good cause, and this action makes moot the rulemaking
(published April 3, 2013) that did invoke that authority.
Comment: The commenter also objected to EPA's description of the
error in the October 26, 2010, action as essentially a typographical
error. The commenter claimed that ``[t]he Utilities did not submit
comments [at the time of EPA's October 26, 2010, rulemaking] because
U.S. EPA approved Ohio Adm. Code 3745-17-03 in its entirety as the
notice indicated. Had the Utilities understood that these rules were
selective to subpart (A), the Utilities may have submitted comments on
this proposal.''
Response: As an initial matter, EPA notes that the commenter's
claim supports the Agency's view that the error in the October 26,
2010, action engendered confusion and misunderstanding among some
affected parties. The commenter speculates that had EPA's October 26,
2010, rulemaking used preamble language and a codification that more
clearly identified that the only revision to OAC 3745-17-03 that EPA
was approving was the cross reference in OAC 3745-17-03(A), it might
have commented. Presumably those comments would have urged EPA to
approve portions of OAC 3745-17-03 that were outside the scope and
purpose of the applicable state submission, which with respect to OAC
3745-17-03 only requested the revision of the cross reference in OAC
3745-17-03(A). In such a hypothetical situation, EPA presumably would
have responded to those comments by explaining that it was not
approving any revision to OAC 3745-17-03 beyond the cross reference in
OAC 3745-17-03(A) and that comments beyond that narrow issue were
beyond the scope of the October 26, 2010, rulemaking.
In any case, the commenter has now had the opportunity to comment
on the very issue that it speculated it would have commented on under
the 2010 conditions it hypothesized. The proposed rulemaking for this
error correction action proposed to find that rulemaking on portions of
OAC 3745-17-03 other than OAC 3745-17-03(A) in the 2010 air quality
standards rulemaking would have been outside the scope of that
rulemaking. Thus, EPA solicited comment on precisely the issue that the
commenter speculated it would have commented on in its hypothesized
2010 circumstances, i.e., whether or not rulemaking on OAC 3745-17-
03(B) would have been an appropriate part of the 2010 rulemaking on
Ohio's air quality standards submittal. Of note is that in the actual,
present circumstances, the commenter had the benefit of express EPA
statements in the February 7, 2014, proposal, stating that any action
in response to Ohio's submittal of September 10, 2009, on portions of
OAC 3745-17-03 other than OAC 3745-17-03(A) would be outside the scope
of the rulemaking because it would not be pertinent to the SIP revision
request that EPA was considering.
Finally, EPA notes that the commenter did in fact comment, to urge
approval of revisions in OAC 3745-17-03(B), without contesting EPA's
view that these provisions are outside the scope of the relevant state
submission and EPA's rulemaking thereon. As explained in the proposal
for this action, those revisions were not at issue in its October 26,
2010, rulemaking and are not at issue in this error correction. EPA
regrets the inconvenience to all parties that arose from the error in
its October 26, 2010, rulemaking. However, the point here is that it is
unnecessary to speculate on how the commenter would have commented on
the October 26, 2010, rulemaking had that rulemaking more clearly
stated that the only revision to OAC 3745-17-03 under consideration was
the revision to the cross reference in OAC 3745-17-03(A). The commenter
has now had the opportunity to comment on the applicable issues, and
EPA is addressing its comments here.
Comment: The commenter also objected to EPA's statements in the
proposal for this action that it is correcting what is essentially a
typographical error. The commenter asserted that this ``correction is
not trivial.''
Response: The commenter did not explain its substantive grounds for
objecting to EPA's proposed error correction. The commenter omits any
rationale for why the significance of the provisions of OAC 3745-17-
03(B) would justify labeling the mistaken codification in EPA's October
26, 2010, rulemaking as anything other than an error or why, regardless
of label, the misleading codification does not warrant correction. For
example, the commenter implies that a significance criterion applies in
judging whether a statement is in error, as if an action with
significant ramifications cannot be in error or that errors cannot have
significant consequences. However, the commenter offered no rationale
for why the misstatements in the October 26, 2010, rulemaking, whatever
the significance of those misstatements, should not be considered to be
in error.
EPA's proposed rulemaking provides extensive discussion of why EPA
believes that the codification in its October 26, 2010, action was in
error, including multiple reasons that demonstrate that EPA did not
intend and could not have intended to approve provisions in OAC 3745-
17-03 that were beyond the stated purpose of Ohio's submission, which
with respect to OAC 3745-17-03 was only to revise the cross reference
in OAC 3745-17-03(A). Conspicuously absent from the commenter's
comments is any specific argument contesting EPA's rationale for this
error correction, be it to question EPA's interpretation of Ohio's
September 10, 2009, submission, to dispute that EPA did not intend and
could not have intended to take action on OAC 3745-17-03(B), or to
challenge EPA's assertion that in any case there has been no legally
valid action on OAC 3745-17-03(B) because EPA has not addressed
pertinent comments on its prior proposed disapproval of that separate
revision (including comments that the commenter itself attests to
making).
Comment: The commenter states, ``the Utilities disagree with U.S.
EPA's assertion that its `correction' does not allow substantive
comments on Ohio Adm. Code 3745-17-03.'' The commenter further asserted
that ``U.S. EPA's action is essentially making Ohio's SIP more
stringent than it was when it approved Ohio Adm. Code 3745-17-03 in
2010. . . . [Therefore,] the Utilities believe that substantive
comments on Ohio Adm. Code 3745-17-03 are proper and should be
considered by U.S. EPA.''
Response: These comments misrepresent EPA's assertion,
mischaracterize EPA's action, and provide no rationale for EPA to
change its views on relevant matters. EPA's proposed rulemaking states:
``any substantive revisions to OAC 3745-17-03, including any revisions
to OAC 3745-17-03(B)(1), are not at issue in this rulemaking. Only
comments regarding EPA's correction of the error in the October 26,
2010, action are germane to this rulemaking under section 110(k)(6).''
The commenter may elect to make comments that are not germane, and the
commenter has
[[Page 68463]]
exercised its right to do so, though the commenter has not challenged
EPA's proposed rationale as to the scope of comments that should be
considered germane. For example, even if EPA's action could be
misconstrued as a substantive revision to the approved SIP (which it is
not), and whether the newer version of OAC 3745-17-03(B) is less
stringent than the older version (as the commenter contended in these
comments) or not (as the commenter contended in its attached comments
from 2005), the commenter does not explain why this asserted change in
stringency justifies predicating EPA's action to correct an error on
the substantive merits of erroneously codified provisions. Therefore,
EPA concludes that comments as to the substantive merits of OAC 3745-
17-03(B) are not germane to this action, which only addresses the error
that occurred in the October 26, 2010, action pertaining to Ohio EPA's
submission regarding its air quality standards rules.
Similarly, the commenter mischaracterized EPA's proposed error
action, asserting that EPA is hereby removing an approval of portions
of OAC 3745-17-03 that, it asserted, EPA approved in the October 26,
2010, action. The proposed rulemaking explained at length that EPA
cannot have approved any portion of 3745-17-03 in 2010 other than the
cross reference in OAC 3745-17-03(A), and so the action EPA proposed
clarifies the approved SIP without changing the substance of what has
actually been approved. Again, the commenter provided no rationale for
adopting its views as to the nature of EPA's proposed action rather
than the views EPA proposed.
Chamber et al.
Comment: The commenter provided an extensive description of
provisions in OAC 3745-17-03(B). The commenter also provided a history
of this provision, including Ohio's submission of the provision to EPA
in June 2003, EPA's proposal to disapprove the provision in June 2005,
the (erroneous) appearance of EPA approving the provision on October
26, 2010, the EPA correction of this appearance on April 3, 2013,
without reference to correction authority in Clean Air Act section
110(k)(6), a petition for EPA to reconsider this correction, and EPA's
proposal published on February 7, 2014, to make this correction under
the authority of Clean Air Act section 110(k)(6).
Response: EPA generally agrees with the commenters recitation of
the facts, but does not agree with the implication that ``appearing''
to approve the revision means that it was in fact approved. Moreover,
this portion of these comments provides background information and does
not urge any changes to EPA's views underlying the relevant proposed
action, and so no detailed review of this portion of these comments is
warranted. Any history of the provisions of OAC 3745-17-03(B) should
also note that Ohio (subsequent to these comments) has withdrawn its
submission that sought approval of the provision.
Comment: The commenter stated that it ``submit[ted] these comments
for two reasons. First, we would like to briefly address EPA's comment
that the COMS provision is `significant and substantive' and `would
allow significantly more opacity during certain periods.' This appears
to be a reference to [text in EPA's June 2005 proposed rulemaking (at
70 FR 36903), quoted in the comment].''
The commenter raised several objections to these EPA statements.
The commenter asserted that the scenario EPA discussed in the June 2005
proposed disapproval, intended as an example case in which the revised
version of OAC 3745-17-03(B) ``allow[s] excess opacity on occasions
that excess opacity is currently prohibited,'' to reflect an unlikely
pattern of operation that would not be expected to be identified as a
violation using the reference method (Method 9) of the unrevised rule.
``In summary, the alternative of continuous instrumental monitoring of
in-stack opacity in lieu of periodic Method 9 visible emission
observations may be `significant and substantive' in terms of imposing
more stringent performance obligations, but it certainly [is] not a
`significant and substantive' relaxation of the performance obligation
where Method 9 is the SIP reference test for opacity.''
Response: The commenter is correct that the pertinent statement in
the February 7, 2014, proposed rulemaking reflects the views expressed
in the cited statement in EPA's June 27, 2005, proposed rulemaking. The
commenter also observed that EPA has not completed rulemaking pursuant
to this June 2005 proposed disapproval. EPA's purpose for making these
statements in the proposal for this error correction was to provide
context and to explain the significance of the error, not to take a
substantive position. To be clear, in the June 2005 proposal, EPA
proposed to find that the revised version of OAC 3745-17-03(B) would
have allowed significantly more opacity during certain periods and that
the state had failed to provide a section 110(l) or section 193
analysis to justify the resulting relaxation; subsequently, EPA
received comments disputing that finding, and EPA has not yet taken
final action on that proposal.
Because Ohio has withdrawn its June 2003 submission, however, EPA
will be conducting no further rulemaking on that submission. Therefore,
it is no longer germane to any ongoing rulemaking whether Ohio's June
2003 submission would have tightened or relaxed the stringency of
Ohio's existing SIP. In any case, the desirability of clarifying the
status of OAC 3745-17-03(B) is not contingent on any final judgment
regarding the effect of previously submitted revisions to OAC 3745-17-
03(B) on allowable opacity. In its February 7, 2014, proposal, EPA
sought merely to explain why the error in its October 26, 2010, final
rule warranted correction. Comments from the Ohio Utilities Group
discussed above suggest that the provisions of OAC 3745-17-03(B), and
the associated relaxation of requirements, are too important to be the
subject of an error correction. These comments from the Chamber et al.
argue that the provisions of OAC 3745-17-03(B) are not a ``significant
and substantive'' relaxation of the opacity-related requirements and in
fact may be a ``significant and substantive'' tightening of performance
obligations. Regardless of these conflicting comments, three parties
have concluded that the status of OAC 3745-17-03(B) is sufficiently
important to comment on rulemaking proposing to clarify the status of
this rule. Even aside from questions regarding the substantive
consequences of revisions to OAC 3745-17-03(B), EPA seeks clarity
regarding which rules have been approved into the SIP, especially for
rules that prompt significant substantive interest. Consequently, EPA
has concluded that it is important to clarify the scope of EPA's
rulemaking on Ohio's submittal addressing air quality standards and to
correct the errors in the October 26, 2010, action that created a
misimpression that EPA had approved OAC 3745-17-03(B)as a part of the
SIP.
Comment: The commenter also asked that EPA complete its rulemaking
action on the June 2003 SIP revision that EPA addressed in the June
2005 proposed disapproval.
Response: Ohio has withdrawn the pertinent elements of its June
2003 SIP revision submission. Thus, no portion of this submission
remains pending.
III. What action is EPA taking?
Pursuant to section 110(k)(6), EPA is determining that its October
26, 2010, rulemaking was in error to the extent
[[Page 68464]]
that it appeared to approve revisions to OAC 3745-17-03 beyond the
revision to the cross reference in OAC 3745-17-03(A). Through this
action, EPA is clarifying that in the October 26, 2010, action, the
Agency did not approve any revisions to OAC 3745-17-03 except for the
specific revision to the cross reference in OAC 3745-17-03(A) requested
by the state. But for that change, the currently applicable version of
OAC 3745-17-03 in the Ohio SIP is the version effective in the state on
January 31, 1998, approved by EPA on October 16, 2007. The currently
applicable version of OAC 3745-17-03 in the Ohio SIP does not contain
any revisions addressed in EPA's proposed approval and disapproval on
June 27, 2005. This action establishes that the codification of EPA's
October 26, 2010, action, in relevant part at 40 CFR
52.1870(c)(151)(i)(A), is clarified pursuant to the authority of Clean
Air Act section 110(k)(6) to codify the approval of only the revised
cross reference in OAC 3745-17-03(A) and not of any other portions of
OAC 3745-17-03. In particular, EPA in that action did not approve any
revisions related to OAC 3745-17-03(B).
On April 3, 2013, EPA used its authority under section 553 of the
Administrative Procedures Act to amend the erroneous codification in
its October 26, 2010, rulemaking without notice and comment rulemaking.
In that rulemaking, EPA corrected the erroneous statements and the
misleading codification to reflect more clearly that EPA had only
approved the one narrow revision requested by the state in OAC 3745-17-
03, i.e., the revision of the cross reference in OAC 3745-17-03(A).
Thus, effective April 3, 2013, the Code of Federal Regulations has
properly reflected the corrected codification. In response to a
petition for reconsideration, EPA today is replacing that prior
correction with an error correction pursuant to section 110(k)(6).
Nevertheless, during the pendency of the current rulemaking pursuant to
section 110(k)(6), EPA opted not to stay or revoke the correction
action of April 3, 2013, to avoid exacerbating the misimpressions
caused by the October 26, 2010, error. Therefore, the status quo is
that the Code of Federal Regulations already reflects the corrected
codification.
Ordinarily, a rulemaking establishing a corrected codification
would include not just a preamble but would also include a codification
section, in which the Office of the Federal Register is instructed to
amend the applicable sections of the Code of Federal Regulations.
However, this action involves circumstances in which the pertinent
section of the Code of Federal Regulations already correctly reflects
the EPA approved version of OAC 3745-17-03, as a result of action taken
April 3, 2013. Conceptually, this action replaces the pertinent
revisions to the Code of Federal Regulations promulgated on April 3,
2013, with identical revisions pursuant to this action. In practical
terms, the net effect of this action is no change in the Code of
Federal Regulations. It is inappropriate to provide a null set of
instructions, to instruct the Office of the Federal Register to make no
changes to the Code of Federal Regulations. Therefore, this action
includes no instructions to the Office of the Federal Register, no
requested revisions to the Code of Federal Regulations, and indeed no
codification section. As a result, the Office of the Federal Register's
records will show the pertinent revisions as being made April 3, 2013.
Nevertheless, this action should be viewed as replacing those
corrections, promulgated under the authority of Administrative
Procedures Act section 553, with identical corrections, promulgated
under the authority of Clean Air Action section 110(k)(6).
IV. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
Under the Clean Air Act, the Administrator is required to approve a
SIP submission that complies with the provisions of the Clean Air Act
and applicable Federal regulations. 42 U.S.C. 7410(k); 40 CFR 52.02(a).
Thus, in reviewing SIP submissions, EPA's role is to approve state
choices, provided that they meet the criteria of the Clean Air Act.
This action merely corrects an error in EPA's prior action and does not
impose additional requirements beyond those imposed by state law. For
that reason, this action:
Is not a ``significant regulatory action'' subject to
review by the Office of Management and Budget under Executive Order
12866 (58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993);
Does not impose an information collection burden under the
provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
Is certified as not having a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small entities under the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.);
Does not contain any unfunded mandate or significantly or
uniquely affect small governments, as described in the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Public Law 104-4);
Does not have Federalism implications as specified in
Executive Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10, 1999);
Is not an economically significant regulatory action based
on health or safety risks subject to Executive Order 13045 (62 FR
19885, April 23, 1997);
Is not a significant regulatory action subject to
Executive Order 13211 (66 FR 28355, May 22, 2001);
Is not subject to requirements of Section 12(d) of the
National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272
note) because application of those requirements would be inconsistent
with the CAA; and
Does not provide EPA with the discretionary authority to
address, as appropriate, disproportionate human health or environmental
effects, using practicable and legally permissible methods, under
Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
In addition, this rule does not have tribal implications as
specified by Executive Order 13175 (65 FR 67249, November 9, 2000),
because the SIP is not approved to apply in Indian country located in
the state, and EPA notes that it will not impose substantial direct
costs on tribal governments or preempt tribal law.
The Congressional Review Act, 5 U.S.C. 801 et seq., as added by the
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996, generally
provides that before a rule may take effect, the agency promulgating
the rule must submit a rule report, which includes a copy of the rule,
to each House of the Congress and to the Comptroller General of the
United States. EPA will submit a report containing this action and
other required information to the U.S. Senate, the U.S. House of
Representatives, and the Comptroller General of the United States prior
to publication of the rule in the Federal Register. A major rule cannot
take effect until 60 days after it is published in the Federal
Register. This action is not a ``major rule'' as defined by 5 U.S.C.
804(2).
Under section 307(b)(1) of the Clean Air Act, petitions for
judicial review of this action must be filed in the United States Court
of Appeals for the appropriate circuit by January 4, 2016. Filing a
petition for reconsideration by the Administrator of this final rule
does not affect the finality of this action for the purposes of
judicial review nor does it extend the time within which a petition for
judicial review may be filed, and shall not postpone the effectiveness
of such rule or action. This action may not be challenged later in
proceedings to enforce its requirements. (See section 307(b)(2)).
[[Page 68465]]
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Intergovernmental relations, Particulate matter, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
Dated: October 22, 2015.
Susan Hedman,
Regional Administrator, Region 5.
[FR Doc. 2015-28095 Filed 11-4-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P